"If you're not doing anything..."

Nurses Relations

Published

Two patients in the department, neither critically ill- three nurses present. I've just discharged my patient, turned over the room, and now am sitting down to check my work related email after having been away for five weeks.

Other nurse walks up behind me and says "Hey Stargazer, could you fax this paper for me if you're not doing anything? I've been so busy I haven't had the time."

Clearly, I *am* doing something- checking my work related email after a long absence is a reasonable thing to do on the clock if I have the time, and I have the time right now. She has *one* patient who is not very sick, and she is most definitely NOT drowning.

How would you respond?

Specializes in Emergency.

"I'm busy right now, this is hospital related".

dudette10, MSN, RN

3,530 Posts

Specializes in Med/Surg, Academics.

"I've been gone for five weeks, so I'm checking my work email. It's piling up! I would help you out otherwise, but right now, I really need to get this done while the gettin' is good. Sorry!"

toomuchbaloney

12,662 Posts

Specializes in NICU, PICU, Transport, L&D, Hospice.

Maybe the unit clerk could help you...I'm busy just now.

laKrugRN

479 Posts

Specializes in Cardiac, ER, Pediatrics, Corrections.

"Sorry, I am too busy to help. As you know, I have been gone for 5 weeks and really need to catch up on these things! Sorry again" Sometimes we just have to say NO.

dexm

73 Posts

Specializes in ICU, ED.

Really? You're checking your email and you don't even have a patient anymore. Work-related or not, would it kill you to help out a coworker? I don't care whether you think she's busy or not. She has a patient so she's busier than you are. I work in an ICU, and even on days where my patient isn't very sick I can be just as busy as I am with a really sick patient. Also, why would you let your coworkers get to the point where they are "drowning" before you would deem them worthy of your help? Even if it is just sending a fax. Who. Cares. It's called teamwork.

I can see how you might be more reluctant to do it if this person regularly over delegates, repeatedly delegates inappropriate tasks, etc. But this seems like an appropriate task to ask of a coworker, and honestly, checking email is not a acceptable excuse. Sorry.

Also, if checking email is "a reasonable thing to do on the clock if [you] have the time," then one could argue that staying after your shift to check your email because you were busy helping your coworkers would be a "reasonable" thing to do as well.

I have to agree with dexm ...although I might say, "I need two minutes, then I'm all over it." while holding out my hand to receive the fax. Any super-urgent communication would not be sent via email.

jadelpn, LPN, EMT-B

9 Articles; 4,800 Posts

Seeing as we all have to log out of computers if we so much as stand up to stretch, I can see the point.

However, I would ask if the fax needed to happen right this moment, or could it wait 15 minutes? One's eyes glaze over after 15 solid minutes of reading 952 emails about patient satsfaction scores and meetings that you have already missed anyways.

Read a few, LOG OUT (the newest "thing" that is huge in the compliance lingo these days) and go for a little walk to the fax machine, fax, grab yourself a coffee on the way back, come back and finish your email.

Chances are that you may be asked to help do something or another, so reading in small incriments is perhaps may be a given anyways. Flag those emails that you need to look at again that are due to policy changes or some other really important things, otherwise, it is a matter of weeding through the masses.

Lev, MSN, RN, NP

4 Articles; 2,805 Posts

Specializes in Family Nurse Practitioner.

"Yeah, leave it there and I'll see if I can get to it after I finish up with these work emails."

psu_213, BSN, RN

3,878 Posts

Specializes in Emergency, Telemetry, Transplant.

"I always screw up things on our fax machine" [God honest truth] "so I think you should ask one of the secretaries."

I understand the point of teamwork, and, if I was "only" catching up on email, it appears that I could move on to something else, but good Lord, the fax can wait a minute and "I can help you in few [left intentionally vague] minutes."

friggasdistaff

57 Posts

What's the big deal? Sending a fax will take less than five minutes of your time, and add to your good karma.

I'm not your secretary, fax your own mess.

Kidding.. Sort of..

+ Add a Comment